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By Farhat Javed
BBC Urdu, Manoor valley
"We need supplies, we need medicine and please rebuild the bridge, we are left with nothing now." Those are the contents of a handwritten note villagers in the Manoor valley in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province threw to our team during our visit.
Hundreds of them are stranded across the river after a flash flood hit the region on Friday, destroying at least ten bridges and dozens of buildings.
Manoor valley is located up in the mountains of Kaghan - a famous tourist destination in Pakistan. The valley has been hit by a torrential flood that killed at least 15 people, including women and children.
Flash floods swept away the only concrete bridge connecting the scenic valley to the main city. Since then, all the villages on the other side of the river have been cut off and resident are waiting for help.
The BBC's team reach the valley after a dangerous one-hour drive where the road was damaged at many points due to the flooding and landslides.
In Manoor, two bridges have completely collapsed and a temporary wooden bridge has been erected. Here, we meet a woman sitting with her belongings. She tells the BBC she can see her home but is unable to reach it.
"My home and my children are on the other side of the river. I've been waiting here for two days now thinking the government might come and repair the bridge. But authorities are telling us that we should start walking around the other side of the mountain to reach our homes. But that's a hike of eight to ten hours. I am an old woman. How can I walk this much?"
She waits for a few more minutes and leaves when the rain starts again and water flowing underneath the temporary wooden bridge begins to swell up.
We see men, women and children sitting outside their mud houses on the other side of the river. They wave at us thinking we are government officials.
It is then that some of them throw us a piece of paper across the river, packing it into a plastic bag filled with stones in order to throw it to the side of the river where we are filming. This is the only way they can communicate with the other part of the village these days. Mobile networks do not operate here.
The handwritten letter carries information about the losses they are coping with and also requests supplies and medicine for the stranded villagers.
"Many people are sick and can't leave the village on foot. Kindly get the bridge built, it's the main connection with the city," the letter says.
"We need supplies. We need a road," Abdul Rasheed, 60, tells us while speaking of his ordeal. He has lost his wagon to the flood - his only means of earning money to feed his family.
"There are many other people who have lost their property and means of income," he says. "They need help. They need food. There was a small market here which was swept away. Shops had all the food and supplies.
"My home is on the other side and now I'll have to walk for eight hours to reach my home. How can I do that in such an old age?" he asks.
Many shops and hotels have been destroyed here. Soheil and his brother have lost their mobile phone repair shop to the flood.
He tells the BBC he has three families to feed and is uncertain about his future now. "I don't know what to do. No one has come here to help us as we deserve. Every shopkeeper here is worried. They are all poor people who have big families to feed," he says.
"These authorities and politicians come here for photo sessions and fun. They come, take photos and leave. No one is helping us."
But the deputy commissioner of the district tells the BBC a comprehensive rescue and relief operation was carried out immediately in the area and all the hotels have been evacuated. He adds that an assessment has already been made about property damages.
"We have completed the assessment and flood victims will be compensated soon," he states. "Work has already started regarding reconstruction of the bridge, but it will take some time."
While the government blames climate change for the flooding, communities are criticising government and local authorities for allowing builders to construct hotels on the banks of the river.
"These hotels and markets blocked the natural waterways, and so we are witnessing much bigger losses due to the floods which could have been avoided easily," says another resident in the main market of Kaghan.
Many hotels are built on the banks of the River Kunhar in Kaghan and the adjacent valleys. Floods have destroyed some of them, along with a police station and a religious school.
A few hundred metres from the police station, a family sits in a temporary tent right on the river's bank. They say eight members of their family were washed away by the same flood.
Heavy rains and floods are wreaking havoc across Pakistan.
More than 1,000 people have been killed while thousands have been displaced. Officials say at least 700,000 homes have been destroyed.
With millions waiting for food, drinking water and shelter, rescue teams are struggling to reach these cut-off communities. Provinces like Sindh and Balochistan are the worst affected but mountainous regions in Khyber Pakhtunkha are also badly hit.
Pakistani troops have also been called in to assist aid agencies in reaching the flood-affected areas as road links have been damaged and the only way to reach most communities is with helicopters.
Pakistan's government is also appealing to friendly countries, donors and international financial institutions to assist them in coping with the calamity.
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